Example sentences of "information from the " in BNC.

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1 The Guide has long been seen as CAMRA 's flagship , mixing solid campaigning points with entertaining features , the latest information from the brewing world and Britain 's best pub guide .
2 Although a shortlist of five candidates for the position of coach has been prepared , Jefferson Williams , coach of the England men 's team , said yesterday his squad were ‘ annoyed ’ at the lack of information from the EVA .
3 But war was under way again in southern Angola , the team faced obvious difficulties and had to rely on information from the Angolan government .
4 It did a particularly good job of informing people about the issues — especially if they were tabloid press readers , who could get relatively little information from the press ; and it made electors feel more warmth and commitment to the party system and party leaders generally .
5 Older people are more susceptible to cold , in part because information from the brain in response to a lower blood temperature and a cool skin is acted upon less readily by the systems in the body that normally carry out those instructions .
6 • They are ( as their name indicates ) immediately above the optic chiasm , an area where the two nerves which carry visual information from the eyes cross over each other on their way to that part of the brain that analyses vision .
7 It was commissioned by the National Council for Civil Liberties and uses information from the league 's records .
8 Mr Gates would be happy to get his financial information from the quarterly report to shareholders — so long as he can be confident that the news will be as consistently good as it has been during Mr Shirley 's seven years in charge .
9 Civilian users can not decipher as much information from the satellites ' signals and thus get fixes that are less precise .
10 Information from the French , American and Russian experts who helped set up Iraq 's air defences will have helped in their defeat or circumvention — a jammer which knows how the enemy radar ‘ thinks ’ has a great advantage .
11 The role of documentation and the devices for handling information in a museum context often remain hidden to visitors , who are nonetheless bombarded with information from the moment they enter any large museum or art gallery — in the form of signs indicating the way to the cafeteria , ground-plans of the premises , or , more obviously , labels and information panels associated with the gallery displays .
12 It would , it is true , convey the necessary information from the eye to the brain , but all the necessary computations would still remain to be done .
13 Matters are further complicated by the fact that information from the two eyes is brought together in the primary visual cortex .
14 All information from the right visual field , whether entering by the right or left eye , is passed to the left visual cortex , and all information from the left visual field is passed to the right visual cortex .
15 All information from the right visual field , whether entering by the right or left eye , is passed to the left visual cortex , and all information from the left visual field is passed to the right visual cortex .
16 Further information from the Netherlands Board of Tourism , 25–28 Buckingham Gate , London SW1E 6LD ( 071–630 0451 ) .
17 Other information from the completed schedules does give cause for concern .
18 Information from the drink diaries , based on a comparison of the averages for the first and the last three weeks of the course , revealed a shift from high to moderate drinking levels for males , that is , from 40 to 32 units per week .
19 ( 2 ) The class was asked to instruct me and one of the pupils in how to behave as a reporter and doctor respectively , the reporter wanting information from the busy doctor about ‘ these new machines ’ he had heard about .
20 Information from the bio-energy and motivational — behavioural systems is returned in the form of an ‘ output copy ’ to the perceptual system .
21 The consciousness we experience is most usually a structure derived from complex processing of information from the senses and elaborately categorized to make a consistent ‘ picture ’ against which fresh information can be sorted and ‘ understood ’ .
22 Early works ( Darling , 1947 & Darling & Boyd , 1964 ) were of a general nature , but contained a great deal of botanical information from the Outer Hebrides .
23 Eventually GCCS in London and Singapore was in a position to read all Japanese naval signals , right up to the attack on Pearl Harbor , although Churchill carefully kept this information from the Americans .
24 The legend that Crabb was taken back to Russia alive continued to circulate for several years and indeed still does , helped by a number of books claiming to be based on secret information from the East .
25 Rather the assertion is that explicit training is not necessary to produce discrimination , that the need to extract information from the environment is enough to do so , independently of any externally imposed rewards or punishments or of knowledge of results more generally .
26 Virtually everyone who works for an enterprise from time to time will acquire information from the environment of potential value to its operations .
27 Some companies ( particularly in the USA ) , in response to these and other factors , decided in the late 70s and early 80s that they should designate within their organisations a person or persons whose job would be to specialise in the acquisition and processing of information from the environment that might be of potential strategic importance .
28 They will retrieve any piece of information from the environment that can be legitimately acquired , or , in some cases , illegitimately acquired [ Wall & Shin ( 1984 ) ] .
29 Rather , on the assumption that the firm manages to devise effective mechanisms for routeing potentially relevant information from the external environment to its decision makers , we will ask : ‘ How should we try to ensure that the information , when it arrives on the executive 's desk , is usable by that executive ? ’
30 In contrast to most of the statutorily required information , the information produced by these ‘ commentators ’ , and the information from the players that they are not legally required to release , but have chosen to do so voluntarily , can appear in a large number of logical documentary formats :
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